The release of the notes taken by Dallas Police Department Homicide Detective Will Fritz during his interrogation of Lee Harvey Oswald, the suspected assassin of President John F. Kennedy, in which Lee told Fritz that he was out front with Bill Shelly has resurrected a debate of long-standing over whether Oswald was the Doorway Man in the famous photograph taken during the assassination by Associated Press photographer James Ike Altgens. In this study, we examine that question. Dr. Fetzer had previously concluded that Oswald was another figure in the Altgens photo, namely, the man who is standing to the right/front of Doorway Man as viewed in the photograph (to Doorway Mans left/front from his perspective) but whose face and shirt have been obliterated. New observations, first advanced by Ralph Cinque, have convinced Fetzer that Cinque is right: the man in the doorway was Lee Harvey Oswald, after all.
In addition to Cinques arguments that the man in the doorway was wearing Oswalds shirt, Fetzer adds the complementary argument that the shirt of the other figure had to be obscured for the obvious reason that it would have given the game away, which explains why his shirt as well as his face had to be removed. Doorway Mans face, hairline and the pattern of his shirt were tweaked to more closely resemble Lovelady, but the form, the fit, and the lay of his mans outer-shirt and under-shirt are those of Oswald. So, unless Lovelady was wearing Oswalds clothing, the evidence that we present leaves no room for reasonable doubt.
The Will Fritz Notes
In JFK: What We Know Now That We Didnt Know Then (Veterans Today, 21 November 2011), Dr. James H. Fetzer provides a valuable summation of recent advances in JFK assassination research, including the discovery of the written notes of Detective Will Fritz concerning Oswalds whereabouts during the shooting, as mentioned above. That Oswald told Fritz that he was out in front with Bill Shelley contravenes the established belief that he said he was in the lunchroom, where he was shortly before and would be confronted shortly after. Here are those notes:
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